Poor wretch! the mother that him bare,
If she had been in presence there,
In his wan face, and sun-burnt hair,
She had not known her child.
Scott.

duced by the conversation which passed between
Judge Temple and the young hunter, that the
former took the arm of his daughter, and drew
it through his own, when he advanced from the
spot whither Richard had led him, to where the
youth was standing, in a musing attitude, leaning
on his rifle, and apparently contemplating the
dead bird that lay at his feet. The presence of
Marmaduke did not interrupt the sports, which
were resumed, by loud and clamorous disputes
concerning the conditions of a chance, that involv-
ed the life of a bird of much inferior quality to the
last. Leather-stocking and Mohegan had alone
drawn aside to the place where stood their youth-
ful companion; and, although in the immediate
vicinity of such a throng, the following conversa-
tion was heard only by those who were interested
in it.
"I have greatly injured you, Mr. Edwards,"
said the Judge; but the sudden and inexplicable
start with which the person spoken to received

There was nothing in the manner or the offer
of the Judge to justify the reluctance, amounting
nearly to loathing, with which the youth listened
to his speech; but after a powerful effort, as if for
self-command, he replied --
"I would serve you, sir, or any other man, for
an honest support, for I do not affect to conceal
that my necessities are very great, even beyond
what appearances would indicate; but I am fear-
ful that such new duties would interfere too much
with more important business; so that I must de-
cline your offer, and depend on my rifle, as before,
for my subsistence."
Richard here took occasion to whisper to the
young lady, who had shrunk a little from the fore-
ground of the picture --
"This, you see, cousin Bess, is the natural re-
luctance of a half-breed to leave the savage state.

"It is a precarious life," observed Marmaduke,
without hearing the Sheriff's observation, "and
one that brings more evils with it than present
suffering. Trust me, my young friend, my expe-
rience is greater than thine, when I tell thee, that
the unsettled life of these hunters is of vast dis-
advantage for temporal purposes, and it totally
removes one from within the influence of more
sacred things."
"No, no, Judge," interrupted the Leather-
stocking; who was hitherto unseen, or disregard-
ed; "take him into your shanty in welcome, but
tell him the raal thing. I have lived in the woods
for forty long years, and have spent five years at
a time without seeing the light of a clearing, big-
ger than a wind-row in the trees; and I should like
to know where you'll find a man, in his sixty-
eighth year, who can get an easier living, for all
your betterments, and your deer-laws; and, as
for honesty, or doing what's right between man
and man, I'll not turn my back to the longest
winded deacon on your Patent."
"Thou art an exception, Leather-stocking,"
returned the Judge, nodding good-naturedly at the
hunter; "for thou hast a temperance unusual in
thy class, and a hardihood exceeding thy years.
But this youth is made of materials too precious
to be wasted in the forest. I entreat thee to join
my family, if it be but till thy arm be healed. My
daughter here, who is mistress of my dwelling,
will tell thee that thou art welcome."
"Certainly," said Elizabeth, whose earnestness
was strongly checked by the assumption of a wo-
man's dignity. "The unfortunate would be wel-
come at any time, but doubly so, when we feel
that we have occasioned the evil ourselves."

"Yes," said Richard, "and if you relish tur-
key, young man, there are plenty in the coops,
and those of the best kind, I can assure you."
Finding himself thus ably seconded, Marma-
duke pushed his advantage to the utmost. He en-
tered into a detail of the duties that would attend
the situation, and circumstantially mentioned the
reward, and all those points which are deemed of
importance among men of business. The youth
listened in extreme agitation. There was an evi-
dent contest in his feelings; at times he appeared
to wish eagerly for the change, and then again,
the incomprehensible expression of disgust would
cross his handsome features, like a dark cloud ob-
scuring a noon-day sun.
The Indian, in whose manner the depression of
self-abasement was most powerfully exhibited, lis-
tened to the offers of the Judge, with an interest
that increased with each syllable. Gradually he
drew nigher to the group; and when, with his
keen glance, he detected the most marked evi-
dence of yielding in the countenance of his young
companion, he changed at once from his atti-
tude and look of shame, to the fearless and proud
front of an Indian warrior, and moving, with
great dignity, closer to the parties, he spoke in
his turn.
"Listen to your Father," he said, "for his
words are old. Let the Young Eagle and the
Great Land Chief eat together; let them sleep,
without fear, near to each other. The children
of Miquon love not blood; they are just, and
will do right. The sun must rise and set often,
before men can make one family; it is not the
work of a day, but of many winters. The Min-
goes and the Delawares are born enemies; their
blood can never mix in the wigwam; it never
will run in the same stream in the battle. What

This figurative address seemed to have great
weight with the young man, who gradually yield-
ed to the representations of Marmaduke, and
eventually consented to his proposal. It was,
however to be an experiment only; and if either
of the parties thought fit to rescind the engage-
ment, it was left at his option so to do. The re-
markable and ill-concealed reluctance of the youth,
to accept of an offer, which most men in his situ-
ation would consider as an unhoped for elevation,
occasioned no little surprise in those of the spec-
tators to whom he was a stranger; and it left a
slight impression to his disadvantage. When the
parties separated, they very naturally made the
subject the topic of a conversation, which we
shall relate; first commencing with the Judge, his
daughter, and Richard, who were slowly pursu-
ing the way back to the Mansion-house.
"I have surely endeavoured to remember the
holy mandates of our Redeemer, when he bids us
to `love them who despitefully use you,' in my
intercourse with this incomprehensible boy," said
Marmaduke. "I know not what there is in my
dwelling, to frighten a lad of his years, unless it
may be thy presence and visage, Bess."
"No, no," said Richard, with great simplicity
in his manner; "it is not cousin Bess. But when
did you ever know a half-breed, 'duke, who could
bear civilization? for that matter, they are worse
than the savages themselves. Did you notice how
knock-kneed he stood, Elizabeth, and what a wild
look he had in his eyes?"
"I heeded not his eyes, sir, returned the maid-

"With Benjamin and Remarkable," interrupted
Mr. Jones; "you surely would not make the youth
eat with the blacks! He is part Indian, it is true,
but the natives hold the negroes in great con-
tempt. No, no -- he would starve before he would
break a crust with the negroes."
"I am but too happy, Dickon, to tempt him to
eat with ourselves," said Marmaduke, "to think
of offering even the indignity you propose."
"Then, sir," said Elizabeth, with an air that
was slightly affected, as if submitting to her fa-
ther's orders in opposition to her own will, "it is
your pleasure that he be a gentleman."
"Certainly; he is to fill the station of one; let
him receive the treatment that is due to his place,
until we find him unworthy of it."
"Well, well, 'duke," cried the Sheriff, "you
will find it no easy matter to make a gentleman
of him. The old proverb says, `that it takes
three generations to make a gentleman. There
was my father whom every body knew; my
grandfather was an M. D.; and his father a D. D.;
and his father came from England. I never could
come at the truth of his origin, but he was either
a great merchant, in London, or a great country
lawyer."
"Here is a true American genealogy for you,"
said Marmaduke, laughing. "It does very well,
'till you get across the water, where, as every

"To be sure I am," returned the other; "I
have heard my old aunt talk of him by the month.
We are of a good family, Judge Temple, and have
never filled any but honourable stations in life."
"I marvel that you should be satisfied with so
scanty a provision of gentility, in the olden time,
Dickon. Most of the American genealogists com-
mence their traditions, like the stories for chil-
dren, with three brothers, taking especial care
that one of the triumvirate shall be the progenitor
of any of the same name who may happen to be
better furnished with worldly gear than themselves.
But, here, all are equal who know how to conduct
themselves with propriety; and Oliver Edwards
comes into my family, on a footing with both the
High Sheriff and the Judge."
"Well, 'duke, I call this democracy, not repub-
licanism; but I say nothing; only let him keep
within the law, or I shall show him, that the free-
dom of even this country is under wholesome re-
straint."
"Surely, Dickon, you will not execute till I
condemn!" said Marmaduke. "But what says
Bess to the new inmate? We must pay a defer-
rence to the ladies, in this matter, after all."
"Oh! sir," returned Elizabeth, "I believe I
am much like a certain Judge Temple, in this
particular; not easily to be turned from my opi-
nion. But, to be serious, although I must think
the introduction of a demi-savage into the family
a somewhat startling event, whomsoever you
think proper to countenance, may be sure of my
respect."
The Judge drew her arm more closely in his

On the other hand, the foresters, for the three
hunters, notwithstanding their great difference in
character, well deserved this common name, pur-
sued their course along the skirts of the village in
silence. It was not until they had reached the
lake, and were moving over its frozen surface,
towards the foot of the mountain, where their hut
stood, that the youth exclaimed --
"Who could have foreseen this, a month since!
I have consented to serve Marmaduke Temple!
to be an inmate in the dwelling of the greatest
enemy of my race! yet what better could I do?
The servitude cannot be long, and when the mo-
tive for submitting to it ceases to exist, I will
shake it off, like the dust from my feet."
"Is he a Mingo, that you will call him enemy?"
said Mohegan. "The Delaware warrior sits still,
and waits the time of the Great Spirit. He is no
woman, to cry out like a child."
"Well, I'm mistrustful, John," said Leather-
stocking, in whose air there had been, during the
whole business, a strong expression of doubt and
uncertainty. "They say that there's new laws
in the land, and I am sartain that there's new ways
in the mountains. One hardly knows the lakes
and streams, they've altered the country so much.
I must say I'm mistrustful of such smooth speakers;
for I've known the whites talk fair, when they
wanted the Indian lands most. This I will say,
though I'm white myself, and was born nigh York,
and of honest parents too."
"I will submit," said the youth; "I will forget
who I am. Cease to remember, old Mohegan,
that I am the descendant of a Delaware chief,

"Old man!" repeated the Indian, solemnly,
and pausing in his walk, as usual when much ex-
cited -- "yes; John is old. Son of my brother!
if Mohegan was young, when would his rifle be
still? where would the deer hide, and he not find
him? But John is old; his hand is the hand of a
squaw; his tomahawk is a hatchet; brooms and
baskets are his enemies -- he strikes no other. --
Hunger and old age come together. See, Hawk-
eye! when young, he would go days and eat no-
thing; but should he not put the brush on the fire
now, the blaze would go out. Take the son of
Miquon by the hand, and he will help you."
"I'm not the man I was, I'll own, Chingach-
gook," returned the Leather-stocking; "but I can
go without a meal now, on occasion. When we
tracked the Iroquois through the `Beech-woods,'
they druv the game afore them, for I hadn't a
morsel to eat from Monday morning, come Wed-
nesday sundown; and then I shot as fat a buck,
on the Pennsylvanny line, as you ever laid eyes
on. It would have done your heart raal good to
have seen the Delawares eat, -- for I was out
scouting and scrimmaging with their tribe, at the
very time. Lord! the Indians, lad, lay still, and
just waited till Providence should send them their
game; but I foraged about, and put a deer up,
and put him down too, 'fore he had made a do-
zen jumps. I was too weak, and too ravenous
to stop for his flesh; so I took a good drink of
his blood, and the Indians eat of his meat raw.
John was there, and John knows. But then star-
vation would be apt to be too much for me now,

"Enough is said, my friends," cried the youth.
"I feel that every where the sacrifice is requir-
ed at my hands, and it shall be made; but say
no more, I entreat you; I cannot bear the sub-
ject now."
His companions were silent, and they soon
reached the hut, which they entered, after remov-
ing certain complicated and ingenious fastenings,
that were put there, apparently, to guard a pro-
perty of but very little value. Immense piles of
snow lay against the log walls of this secluded
habitation, on one side, while fragments of small
trees, and branches of oak and chestnut, that had
been torn from their parent stems by the winds,
were thrown into a pile, on the other. A small
column of smoke rose through a chimney of
sticks, cemented with clay, along the side of the
rock; and had marked the snow above with its
dark tinges, in a wavy line, from the point of emis-
sion to another where the hill receded from the
brow of a precipice, and held a soil that nourish-
ed trees of a gigantic growth, that overhung the
little bottom beneath.
The remainder of the day passed off as such
days are commonly spent in a new country. --
The settlers thronged to the academy again, to
witness the second effort of Mr. Grant; and Mo-
hegan was one of his hearers. But, notwith-
standing the Divine fixed his eyes intently on the
Indian, when he invited his congregation to ad-
vance to the table, the shame of last night's abase-
ment was yet too keen in the old chief to suffer
him to move.
When the people were dispersing, the clouds
that had been gathering all the morning, were
dense and dirty; and before half of the curious

Sheltered in the warm hall of her father's
comfortable mansion, Elizabeth, accompanied by
Louisa Grant, looked abroad with admiration at
the ever-varying face of things without. Even
the village, which had just before been glittering
with the colour of the frozen element, reluctant-
ly dropped its mask, and the houses exposed their
dark roofs and smoked chimneys. The pines
shook off their covering of snow, and every thing
seemed to be assuming its proper hue, with a ra-
pidity of transition that bordered on the superna-
tural.